PART I.

THE SUCCESS OF REDEMPTION FROM THE RESURRECTION OF CHRIST TO THE DESTRUCTION OF JERUSALEM.

I would now show, how the success of Christ’s purchase of redemption was carried on from Christ’s resurrection to the destruction
of Jerusalem. In speaking of this I would, 1. take notice of the success itself; and, 2. the opposition made against it by
its enemies; and, 3. the terrible judgments of God on those enemies.

I. I would observe the success itself. Soon after Christ had entered into the holy of holies with his own blood, there began a glorious success of what he had
done and suffered.—Having undermined the foundation of Satan’s kingdom, it began to fall apace. Swiftly did it hasten to ruin,
which might well be compared to Satan’s falling like lightning from heaven. Satan before had exalted his throne very high
in this world, even to the very stars of heaven,
reigning with great glory in his heathen Roman empire; but never before had he such a downfall as he had soon after Christ’s
ascension. He had, we may suppose, been very lately triumphing in a supposed victory, having brought about the death of Christ,
which he doubtless gloried in as the greatest feat that ever he did; and probably imagined he had totally defeated God’s design
by him. But he was quickly made sensible, that he had only been ruining his own kingdom, when he saw it tumbling so
fast so soon after, as a consequence of the death of Christ. For Christ, having ascended, and received the Holy Spirit, poured
it forth abundantly for the conversion of thousands and millions of souls.

Never had Christ’s kingdom been so set up in the world. There probably were more souls converted in the age of the apostles,
than had been before from the beginning of the world till that time. Thus God so soon begins gloriously to accomplish his
promise to his Son, wherein he had promised, That he should see his seed, and that the pleasure of the Lord should prosper
in his hand, if he would make his soul an offering for sin. And,

1. Here is to be observed the success which the gospel had among the Jews; for God first began with them. He being about to reject the main body of that people, first calls in his elect from among
them. It was so in former great and dreadful judgments of God on that nation; the bulk of them were destroyed, and only a
remnant saved, or reformed. The bulk of the ten tribes was rejected, when they left the true worship of God under Jeroboam,
and afterwards more
fully in Ahab’s time; but yet there was a remnant of them reserved. Many left their possessions in these tribes, and settled
in the tribes of Judah and Benjamin. And afterwards there were seven thousand in Ahab’s time, who had not bowed the knee to
Baal. From the captivity into Babylon, only a remnant of them ever returned to their own land. So now the greater part of
the people were rejected entirely, but some few were saved. And therefore the Holy Ghost compares this reservation of a number
that were converted by the preaching of the apostles, to those former remnants: Rom. ix. 27. “Esaias also crieth concerning Israel, Though the number of the children of Israel be as the sand of the sea, a remnant shall
be saved.”—See Isa. x. 22.

The glorious success of the gospel among the Jews after Christ’s ascension, began by the pouring out of the Spirit upon the
day of Pentecost. (Acts ii.) So wonderful was this effusion, and so remarkable and swift the effect of it, that we read of three thousand who were converted
to the christian faith in one day, Acts ii. 41. and probably the greater part of these were savingly converted. And after this, we read of God’s
adding to the church daily such as should be saved, ( ver. 47.) Soon after, we read, that the number of them were about five thousand. Thus were not only a multitude converted, but the
church was then eminent in piety, as appears by Acts ii. 46, 47. iv. 32.

Thus the christian church was first formed from the nation of Israel; and therefore, when the Gentiles were called, they were
added to the christian church of Israel, as
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the proselytes of old were to the Mosaic church of Israel. They were only grafted on the stock of Abraham, and were not a
distinct tree; for they were all still the seed of Abraham and Israel; as Ruth the Moabitess, and Uriah the Hittite, and other
proselytes of old, were the same people,
and ranked as the seed of Israel.

The christian church began at Jerusalem, and from thence was propagated to all nations: so that this church of Jerusalem was
the mother of all other churches in the world; agreeable to the prophecy, Isa. ii. 3, 4. “Out of Zion shall go forth the law, and the word of the Lord from Jerusalem: and he shall judge among the nations, and rebuke
many people.” So that the whole church of God is still his spiritual Jerusalem.

After this, we read of many thousands of Jews in Jerusalem that believed, Acts xxi. 20. And we read of multitudes of Jews who were converted in other cities of Judea, and in other parts of the world. For it was
the manner of the apostles to go first into the synagogues of the Jews, and preach the gospel to them, and many in one place
and another believed; as in Damascus, Antioch, and many other places.

In this pouring out of the Spirit, at the Pentecost, began that first great dispensation which is called Christ’s coming in his kingdom. Christ’s coming thus in a spiritual manner for the glorious erection of his kingdom in the world, is represented as his
coming down from heaven, whither he had ascended, John xiv. 18. “I will not leave you comfortless; I will come unto you.” And ver.
28. “Ye have heard how I said unto you, I go away, and come again unto you.” And thus the apostles began to see the kingdom of
heaven come with power, as he promised them, Mark ix. 1.

2. After the success of the gospel had been so gloriously begun among the Jews, we Spirit of God was next wonderfully poured
out on the Samaritans; who were the posterity of those whom the king of Assyria removed from different parts of his dominions, and settled in the
land which had been inhabited by the ten tribes, whom he carried captive. These had received the five books of Moses, and
practised most of the Mosaic rites, and so were a sort of mongrelJews. We do not find them reckoned as Gentiles in the New Testament: for the calling of the Gentiles is spoken of as a new thing
after this, beginning with the conversion of Cornelius. But yet it was an instance of making those a people who were no people:
for they had corrupted the religion of Moses, and did not go up to Jerusalem to worship. They had another temple of their
own in mount Gerizim; which is the mountain of which the woman of Samaria speaks, when she says, Ourfathers worshipped in this mountain. Christ there does not approve of their separation from the Jews; but says, that they worshipped they knew not what, and
that salvation is of the Jews. But now salvation is brought from the Jews to them by the preaching of Philip, (excepting that
before Christ had some success among them,) with whose preaching there was a glorious pouring out of the Spirit of God in
the city of Samaria; where we are told, that “the people
believed Philip preaching the things concerning the kingdom of Christ, and were baptized, both men and women; and that there
was great joy in that city,” Acts viii. 8-12.

Thus Christ had a glorious harvest in Samaria; according to what he said to his disciples at Jacob’s well, three or four years
before, on occasion of the people of Samaria appearing at a distance in the fields coming to the place where he was. John iv. 35, 36. The disposition which the people of Samaria showed towards Christ and his gospel, showed that they were ripe for the harvest;
and now the harvest is come by Philip s preaching. There used to
be a most bitter enmity between the Jews and Samaritans; but now, by their conversion, the christian Jews and Samaritans are
all happily united: for in Christ Jesus is neither Jew nor Samaritan, but Christ is all in all. This was a glorious instance
of the wolf dwelling with the lamb, and the leopard lying down with the kid.

3. The next thing to be observed is the calling the Gentiles. This was a great and glorious dispensation, much spoken of in
the Old Testament, and by the apostles, as a most glorious event. This was began in the conversion of Cornelius and his family,
greatly to the admiration of Peter, who was used as the instrument of it, and of those who were with him, Acts x. and xi. The next instance was the conversion of great numbers of Gentiles in Cyprus,
Cyrene, and Antioch, by the disciples who were scattered abroad by the persecution which arose about Stephen, Acts xi. 19-21. And presently upon this the disciples began to be called Christians first at Antioch, ( ver. 26.)

After this vast multitudes of Gentiles were converted in different parts of the world, chiefly by the ministry of the apostle
Paul. Multitudes flocked into the church of Christ in a great number of cities where the apostle came. So the number of Gentile
members of the christian church soon far exceeded that of its Jewish members; yea, in less than ten years’ time after Paul
was sent forth from Antioch to preach to the Gentiles, it was said of him and his companions,
that they had turned the world upside down: Acts xvii. 6. “These that have turned the world upside down are come hither also.” But the most remarkable instance, seems to be that in
Ephesus, which was a very great city, Acts xix. There was also a very extraordinary ingathering of souls at Corinth, one of the greatest cities in all Greece. And after this many were converted in Rome, the chief city of all the world; and the gospel was
propagated into all parts of the Roman empire. Thus the gospel-sun which had lately risen on the Jews, now rose upon, and
began to enlighten, the heathen world, after they had continued in gross heathenish darkness for so many ages.

This was a great and new thing, such as never had been before. All nations but the Jews, and a few who had occasionally joined
them, had been rejected from about the time of Moses. The Gentile world had been covered with the thick darkness of idolatry;
but now at the joyful sound of the gospel, they began in all parts to forsake their idols, and to cast them to the moles and
to the bats. They now learned to worship the true God, and to trust in his Son Jesus Christ.
God owned them for his people; and those who had so long been afar off, were made nigh by the blood of Christ. Men, from being
heathenish and brutish, became the children of God; were called out of Satan’s kingdom of darkness, and brought into God’s
marvellous light. In almost all countries throughout the known world there were christian assemblies, and joyful praises were
sung to the true God, and Jesus Christ the glorious Redeemer. Now that great building which God began soon after the fall
of man, rises gloriously in a new manner; now Daniel’s prophecies concerning the last kingdom, which should succeed the four
heathenish monarchies, begins to be fulfilled; now the stone cut out of the mountain without hands, began to smite the image
on its feet, and to break it in pieces, and to make great advances towards filling the earth; and now God gathers together
his elect from the four winds of heaven, by the preaching of the apostles and other ministers, (the angels of the christian
church sent forth with the great sound of the gospel-trumpet,) before the destruction of Jerusalem, agreeable to what Christ
foretold, Matt. xxiv. 31.

II. I would proceed now, in the second place, to take notice of the opposition which was made to this success of Christ’s purchase by the enemies of it.—Satan, who lately was so ready to triumph and exult,
as though he had gained the victory in putting Christ to death, now finding himself fallen into the pit which he had digged,
and finding his kingdom falling so fast, and seeing Christ’s kingdom make such amazing progress, was filled with the greatest
confusion
and astonishment: and hell seemed to be effectually alarmed to make the most violent opposition against it. And, first, the
devil stirred up the Jews, who had before crucified Christ, to persecute the church: for it is observable, that the persecution
which the church suffered during this period, was mostly from the Jews. Thus we read in the Acts, when the Holy Ghost was
poured out at Pentecost, how the Jews mocked, and said, These men are full of newwine; and how the scribes and Pharisees, and the captain of the temple, were alarmed, and bestirred themselves to oppose and persecute
the apostles. They first apprehended and threatened them,
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and afterwards imprisoned and beat them; and breathing out threatenings and slaughter against the disciples of the Lord, they
stoned Stephen in a tumultuous rage; and were not content to persecute those that they could find in Judea, but sent abroad
to Damascus and other places, to
persecute all that they could find every where. Herod, who was chief among them, stretched forth his hands to vex the church,
and killed James with the sword, and proceeded to take Peter also, and cast him into prison.

So in other countries we find, that almost wherever the apostles came, the Jews opposed the gospel in a most malignant manner,
contradicting and blaspheming. How many things did the blessed apostle Paul suffer at their hands! How violent and blood-thirsty
did they show themselves towards him, when he came to bring alms to his nation! In this persecution and cruelty was fulfilled
that saying of Christ, Matt. xxiii. 34. “Behold, I send you prophets,
and wise men, and scribes; and some of them ye shall kill and crucify, and some of them shall ye scourge in your synagogues,
and persecute them from city to city.”

III. I proceed to take notice of the judgments which were executed on those enemies of Christ, the persecuting Jews.

1. The bulk of the people were given up to judicial blindness of mind and hardness of heart. Christ denounced such a woe upon
them in the days of his flesh; Matt. xiii. 14, 15.—This curse was also denounced on them by the apostle Paul, Acts xxviii. 25, 26, 27. and under this curse, this judicial blindness and hardness, they remain to this very day, having been subject to it for about
seventeen hundred years, being the most
awful instance of such a judgment, and monument of God’s terrible vengeance, of any people. That they should continue from
generation to generation so obstinately to reject Christ, so that it is a very rare thing that any one of them is converted
to the christian faith—though their own Scriptures of the Old Testament, which they acknowledge, are so full of plain testimonies
against them—is a remarkable evidence of their being dreadfully left of God.

2. They were rejected from being any longer God’s visible people. They were broken off from the stock of Abraham, and since
that have no more been reputed his seed, than the Ishmaelites or Edomites, who are as much his natural seed as they. The greater
part of the two tribes were now cast off, as the ten tribes had been before, and another people were taken in their room,
agreeable to the predictions of their own prophets; Deut. xxxii. 21. “They
have moved me to jealousy with that which is not God; they have provoked me to anger with their vanities; and I will move
them to jealousy with those which are not a people, I will provoke them to anger with a foolish nation; and Isaiah. lxv. 1. “I am sought of them that asked not for me; I am found of them that sought me not.”—They were visibly rejected by God’s directing
his apostles to turn away from them, and let them alone; Acts xiii. 46, 47. “Then
Paul and Barnabas waxed bold, and said, It was necessary that the word of God should first have been spoken to you: but seeing
ye put it from you, and judge yourselves unworthy of everlasting life, lo, we turn to the Gentiles: for so hath the Lord commanded
us.” And so Acts xviii. 6. and Acts xxviii. 28.

Thus far we have had the scripture history to guide us: henceforward we shall have the guidance only of scripture prophecy,
and human histories.

3. The third and last judgment of God on those enemies of the success of the gospel which I shall mention, is the terrible
destruction of their city and country by the Romans.—They had great warnings and many means used with them before this destruction.
First, John the Baptist warned them, and told them, that the axe was laid at the root of the tree; and that every tree which
should not bring forth good fruit, should be hewn down, and cast into the fire. Then Christ
warned them very particularly, and told them of their approaching destruction, at the thoughts of which he wept over them.
And then the apostles after Christ’s ascension abundantly warned them. But they proved obstinate, and went on in their opposition
to Christ and his church, and in their bitter persecuting practices. Their so indignantly persecuting the apostle Paul, of
which we have an account towards the end of the Acts of the Apostles, is supposed to have been not more than seven or eight
years before their destruction.

After this, God was pleased to give them one more very remarkable warning by the apostle Paul, in his epistle to the Hebrews,
written, it is supposed, about four years before their destruction; wherein the plainest and clearest arguments are set before
them from their own law, and from their prophets, for whom they professed such a regard, to prove that Christ Jesus must be
the Son of God, that all their law typified him, and that the Jewish dispensation must needs
have ceased. For though the epistle was more immediately directed to the christian Hebrews, yet the matter of the epistle
plainly shows that the apostle intended it for the use and conviction of the unbelieving Jews. And in this epistle he mentions
particularly the approaching destruction, chap. x. 25. “So much the more, as ye see the day approaching;” and in ver. 27. he speaks of the approaching judgment and
fiery indignation which should devour the adversaries.

But the generality of them, refusing to receive conviction, God soon destroyed with such terrible circumstances, as the destruction
of no country or city since the foundation of the world can parallel; agreeable to what Christ foretold, Matt. xxiv. 21. “For then shall be tribulation, such as was not from the beginning of the world to this time, no, nor ever shall be.” The
first destruction of Jerusalem by the Babylonians was very terrible, as it is
in a most affecting manner described by the prophet Jeremiah, in his Lamentations; but that was nothing to the dreadful misery
and wrath which they suffered in this destruction. God, as Christ foretold, brought on them all the righteous blood that had
been shed from the foundation of the world. Thus the enemies of Christ are made his footstool after his ascension, agreeable
to God’s promise in Psalm cx. and he rules them with a rod of iron. The briars and thorns set
themselves against him in battle: but he went through them; he burned them together.

This destruction of Jerusalem was in all respects agreeable to what Christ had foretold of it, Matt. xxiv. as appeals by the account which Josephus gives of it, who was then present, who had a share in the calamity, and who wrote
the history of their destruction. Many circumstances resembled the destruction of the wicked at the day of judgment; by his
account, it was accompanied with many fearful sights in the heavens, and with a separation of the
righteous from the wicked. Their city and temple were burnt, and razed to the ground; and the ground on which the city stood
was ploughed, so that one stone was not left upon another, Matt. xxiv. 2.

The people had ceased for the most part to be an independent government after the Babylonish captivity; but the sceptre entirely
departed from Judah on the death of Archelaus, when Judea was made a Roman province. After this, they were cast off from being
the people of God; but now their very city and land are utterly destroyed, and they carried away from it; and so have continued
in their dispersions through the world for now above sixteen hundred years.

Thus there was a final end put to the Old-Testament world: all was finished with a kind of day of judgment, in which the people
of God were saved, and his enemies terribly destroyed.—Thus does he who was so lately mocked, despised, and spit upon by these
Jews, and whose followers they so malignantly persecuted, appear gloriously exalted over his enemies.